[Congressional Bills 119th Congress]
[From the U.S. Government Publishing Office]
[H. Res. 1084 Introduced in House (IH)]

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119th CONGRESS
  2d Session
H. RES. 1084

  Support for the designation of February 28 as ``HIV is Not a Crime 
Awareness Day'' and affirming that people living with HIV should not be 
                criminalized based on their HIV status.


_______________________________________________________________________


                    IN THE HOUSE OF REPRESENTATIVES

                           February 25, 2026

     Mr. Pocan (for himself, Mr. Cohen, Mr. Davis of Illinois, Mr. 
   Gottheimer, Mrs. McIver, Ms. Moore of Wisconsin, Ms. Norton, Mrs. 
 Ramirez, Mr. Takano, and Mrs. Watson Coleman) submitted the following 
 resolution; which was referred to the Committee on Energy and Commerce

_______________________________________________________________________

                               RESOLUTION


 
  Support for the designation of February 28 as ``HIV is Not a Crime 
Awareness Day'' and affirming that people living with HIV should not be 
                criminalized based on their HIV status.

Whereas this resolution may be cited as the ``HIV is Not a Crime Day 
        Resolution''
Whereas ``HIV is Not a Crime Awareness Day'' is a nationwide observance that 
        calls on people to take action to invest in the decriminalization of 
        HIV;
Whereas ``HIV is Not a Crime Awareness Day'' was established to raise awareness 
        about the criminalization of people living with HIV and to amplify the 
        voices of individuals and communities most impacted by HIV 
        criminalization;
Whereas HIV criminalization is antiquated enforcement of laws that either 
        criminalize otherwise legal conduct or increase the penalties of illegal 
        conduct based on a person's HIV-positive status, often regardless of 
        transmission occurring, proof of intent to transmit, the possibility of 
        transmission, the risk of transmission, or proof of disclosure;
Whereas more than 40 years into the epidemic, the Centers for Disease Control 
        and Prevention estimates that in the United States more than 1,132,739 
        people are living with HIV, and 39,201 people were diagnosed with HIV in 
        the United States in 2023;
Whereas there is no study or data to support that HIV criminalization laws 
        prevent or lower HIV transmission rates or promote disclosure of HIV 
        status;
Whereas there are 32 states with HIV-specific exposure and/or transmission laws, 
        and 28 states have harsh criminal penalty enhancements that heighten 
        charges based on a person knowing that they are living with HIV;
Whereas there are 5 states that require a person to register on a Sex Offense 
        Registry as part of the punishment for a conviction under HIV-specific 
        laws;
Whereas up to 25% of the cases prosecuted are for spitting or biting, which do 
        not transmit HIV;
Whereas 12 states have modernized their HIV criminalization laws in various ways 
        (IA, CA, CO, LA, NC, MI, MO, NV, WA, TN, VA, and GA) and 5 states have 
        repealed (TX, NJ, IL, ND, and MD);
Whereas a critical step in changing these laws includes educating communities, 
        lawmakers, public health support staff, leaders in impacted communities, 
        law enforcement, and stakeholders in the judicial system;
Whereas according to the Williams Institute reports done in multiple states, 
        Black and brown communities are most impacted by HIV criminalization 
        laws, as well as further disenfranchisement by HIV incidence rates;
Whereas Black women and transgender women are also disproportionately impacted 
        by HIV criminalization laws, especially in states where there are laws 
        that specifically target sex workers;
Whereas ``HIV is Not a Crime Awareness Day'' is a call to action to end state-
        sanctioned violence towards communities of people living with HIV;
Whereas evidence shows that HIV criminalization laws undermine public health 
        efforts by deterring people from seeking HIV testing/treatment, 
        stigmatizing those living with HIV, and the communities most impacted by 
        HIV;
Whereas in order to end the HIV epidemic, we must end HIV criminalization, 
        promote education about HIV, increase HIV funding for treatment and 
        prevention, and reduce stigma and discrimination towards people living 
        with HIV; and
Whereas February 28 of each year is now recognized as ``HIV is Not a Crime 
        Awareness Day'': Now, therefore, be it
    Resolved, That the House of Representatives--
            (1) supports the goals and ideals of ``HIV is Not a Crime 
        Awareness Day'';
            (2) encourages federal, state and local governments, their 
        judicial and healthcare, and educational agencies, schools, and 
        media organizations to recognize and support such a day;
            (3) supports community and law enforcement education on 
        prevention, treatment, transmission, disclosure, and care;
            (4) promotes up-to-date, inclusive, culturally responsible, 
        and medically accurate information about HIV, including pre-
        exposure prophylaxis (PrEP), in sex education curricula to 
        ensure that all people are educated about HIV;
            (5) affirms that people living with HIV should not be 
        criminalized or subject to enhanced punishments solely on the 
        basis of their HIV status;
            (6) supports removal of HIV laws that are scientifically 
        inaccurate and unfairly criminalize people living with HIV for 
        behaviors that are consensual or have no risk of transmission;
            (7) honors and supports individuals and communities 
        affected by HIV criminalization, including those who have been 
        prosecuted, incarcerated, or otherwise harmed under such laws;
            (8) encourages awareness and education, public dialogue, 
        and evidence-based approaches that reflect current scientific 
        understanding of HIV, reduce stigma and promote public health, 
        justice, and equity;
            (9) recognizes the direct impact from harmful legislative 
        efforts seeking to restrict bodily autonomy, such as 
        restrictions on abortion and birth control access and bans on 
        gender affirming care, which negatively impact access to non-
        stigmatizing HIV prevention, education, confidential testing 
        and treatment, and increases risk for criminalization; and
            (10) supports the increase of funding for programs that 
        support people impacted by and living with HIV, as well as 
        programs that support medical mentorship, peer navigation, 
        educating communities on testing and treatment options, PrEP 
        and PEP access, and programs that ensure a smoother transition 
        to HIV care.
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